Active shooter drills became one of the most common school safety measures implemented nationwide in recent years, despite widespread fears that the procedures heighten anxiety, and evidence that school shooters, like the one in Parkland, Florida, use knowledge of the drills to their advantage. Teachers unions in February called for schools to not conduct active shooter drills with students. Now, new research adds data to those concerns.

A report released Thursday, obtained in advance by NBC News, found active shooter drills in schools correlated with a 42 percent increase in anxiety and stress and a 39 percent increase in depression among those in the school community, including students, teachers and parents, based on their social media posts.

  • TillieNeuen [she/her]
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    4 years ago

    You haven't seen dark until you've done an active shooter drill at the district preschool. Herding 15-20 kids aged 3-5 into the bathroom and telling them to be very quiet because we're playing hide and seek with Mrs. [Principal's Name] and if she finds us, we lose.

    Yeah, we lose if we get found all right. And you look around at those wiggily little kids and you know that there's no way in hell that, if there really was an active shooter, you could keep them quiet and still long enough. And you know that you have to do your best to keep them alive anyhow.

    Some high schoolers come to work part days there and take classes on childhood development to get a licence by high school graduation. Last year, one of the girls was like, "if there's a shooter, I'm running." and I was like, well, shit. She's a kid too. Do I expect her to stick around and protect the babies? How? She can die with us I guess, or she can jump out the window like she planned and take off running (yeah, she checked. She can fit through that window.) I can't be mad at her for that.

    The school nurse recommends each teacher keep a stash of emergency suckers so you can pop one in each little mouth when it's REALLY time to be quiet, and hope that distracts them enough to be quiet and still. She was like, "you know how I feel about candy, but this is more important than cavities."

    So we're playing hide and seek and keeping an emergency stash of candy to try and keep the kids alive, if the worst happens. I can't describe to you how that incongruity makes me feel.

    • marxisthayaca [he/him,they/them]
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      4 years ago

      Teachers can pull Sharpies out of pockets the way magicians produce rabbits. I normally have two or three rattling around the bottom of my laptop bag. I was once in line at Starbucks when the Sharpie marker being shared between three baristas ran out of ink. They rummaged under the registers, desperately looking for a replacement before the caffeine-deprived hordes turned on them. I felt like a badass superhero when I stepped to the counter and offered three different colors for them to pick from.

      But I’m thinking about one Sharpie pen in particular. It’s black, medium thickness. And it stays in the blue emergency bag that I keep on the filing cabinet closest to my classroom door. Our school’s emergency bags are remarkably sparse. No band-aids, no first aid materials. We have one flashlight, one sign with my name to help my students find our class if they get separated during a mass exodus, one copy of my class rosters, and one Sharpie marker. Why a marker? Someone asked that very question at a staff meeting. The nurse explained, in a completely emotionless tone, that the Sharpie was so we could identify students and write their names on their bodies in the event of an incident...

      That Sharpie tells me everything I need to know about teaching through COVID. We could have poured resources into prevention. We could’ve spent all summer enforcing mask use and social distancing. We could’ve sacrificed small pleasures for the greater good. We could’ve kept this from happening. But instead, we’re blindly barreling toward reopening even though we know teachers and students will die. We’re going to treat COVID the same way we treat school shootings. An unfortunate but unavoidable cost to doing business. There will be some new morbid addition to the emergency bag. Some simple tool made macabre by the expectation for its use. And like we always do, we will ask our teachers to stand in the doorways and use our bodies as human shields. And if we make it out alive, we’ll be the ones tasked with walking through the wreckage and counting the bodies.

      source

    • KiaKaha [he/him]
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      4 years ago

      Remind me, why don’t you just barricade the doors? It seems having decent locks would fix half of the issue.

      Alternatively, chuck the kids out the windows and run for it.

      Hiding from a school shooter seems pretty challenging.

      • TillieNeuen [she/her]
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        4 years ago

        The bathrooms are inside our classrooms (preschoolers need to pee all the time), so there's a locked door between us and the hallway. That locked door would slow someone down, but a determined person could get through. The idea is to turn off the lights and hide in the bathroom so the shooter doesn't know where people are. (We have pretty curtains to cover our windows, in case of emergency. There's a whole cottage industry of curtains for teachers so we can hopefully hide our kids.) Of course, people are in just about every room in the building, so how effective is that strategy, really? I have my doubts. I've thought about passing kids out the window and telling them to run, but imagine a flock of chickens being told to run in a certain direction, and you'll have an idea of how I think it would go. If they were older, sure.

      • throwawaylemmy [none/use name]
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        4 years ago

        Remind me, why don’t you just barricade the doors? It seems having decent locks would fix half of the issue.

        Time to set-up plus bullets can go through the doors pretty easy depending on the caliber. A teacher alone (in pre-school) isn't gonna be able to chuck enough things at the door as fast as middle-school/high-school kids and the teacher can.

        Tillie mentions the locks, which would be pretty quick to do, but throwing small child-sized tables/chairs etc. would take longer with 1-2 people than 5+ people.